Providing a prime example of life in a nutshell, this is a video of runner Pol Altimira competing in his first 200m race of the season in Sabadell, Spain and stumbling and falling just a split-second before clenching victory. That sucks. Maybe not as bad as I sucked at competitive
This is a video of a girl who met up with some friends in her high school parking lot for a little socially distanced get-together, and is leaving to leave with her soda on top of her car. That’s when another friend sees an opportunity, starts recording, and warns her
This is a short slow motion video of a San Luis Obispo, California high school basketball player attempting to dunk over the heads of four young fans lined up in front of the basket. Unfortunately, he makes contact with the first kid and things quickly spiral downhill for him from
This is a video of three Border Collies enjoying a run in the Lake District of northwestern England and each jumping a road in their own style. One takes the high road, one takes the low road, and one takes the middle-ground, nose-diving into the side of the hill in
Because when it rains, it pours, this is some security cam footage of a skateboarder attempting a kickflip and failing and losing a wheel in the process. Tony Hawk is not impressed. Then, after getting up and realizing he lost a wheel, he attempts to leap the curb on foot
This is a video of a bridesmaid and groomsman trying and failing miserably to pull off a little flip stunt they rehearsed for their entrance at a wedding reception. Making an entrance: clearly these two know how to do it. Particularly if the goal of that entrance is to get
The infamous 11-Foot-8 Bridge (now the 11-Foot-8+8 or 12-Foot-4 Bridge since being raised in 2019, aka the Can Opener Bridge or, officially, the Norfolk Southern–Gregson Street Overpass) of Durham, North Carolina is back at it (previously), this time neatly shearing the top off of a box truck. I only wish
this is a video of Stuart Wiggins of Youtube channel The China Traveller attempting to climb the staircase to the village of Atulie’er, which sits 800-meters (2,624 feet, ~half a mile) vertically on a mountaintop, accessible only by 2,556 steps constructed of tubular steel (each step consisting of two parallel